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The lost wax casting method has been in existence for nearly 5000 years, being used to create all manner of things including jewelry, vessels for liquid, and sculpture. The process consists of carving the item to be cast in wax, then packing it with clay. Once the clay hardens, it’s heated up to melt away the wax. Molten metal is poured in its place, creating the cast.
The art of casting carillon bells has been perfected over many centuries. Using a bronze alloy with a specific ratio of copper to tin, they’re cast with the ideal shape and thickness to produce a clear ringing tone. Once cast, they’re turned on giant lathes to have material shaved off at just the right spots during the tuning process.
Bellfounders such as the Paccard Fonderie des Cloches have been making bells in much the same way for well over 200 years. A notable carillon in the US is at Yale University, which houses 54 bells and can be played similarly to a piano, albeit with gigantic levers attached to each bell. Students chosen as carilloneurs are allowed to play whatever tunes they wish, from the Beatles to Scooby Doo, tolling across New Haven from the top of Harkness Tower.

In addition to being an online editor for MAKE Magazine, Michael Colombo works in fabrication, electronics, sound design, music production and performance (Yes. All that.) In the past he has also been a childrens’ educator and entertainer, and holds a Masters degree from NYU’s Interactive Telecommunications Program.

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Sounds like fun, but you’d be hard pressed to do so without some seriously hefty solenoids, servos, or stepper motors.

Saphir

Please note that the levers on the playing stand move only the clappers, not the bells. That’s MUCH less weight.

http://logos-electro.com Pierce Nichols

It seems like the right actuator for this is air cylinders… they’re relatively inexpensive, and they’ve got the muscle to do the job. You can drive them with solenoids that draw half an amp or so.

Reggie Mcwoowoo

Me and three others like this

http://www.facebook.com/TimGray4 Timothy Gray

So why has nobody created a makerbot that prints in WAX so we can cast this stuff? I cant find any wax string that will work in a makerbot to do this.

Honestly, someone figuring this out will turn the whole world on it’s head. I could print a custom intake manifold for an engine to accept a standard Blower and make supercharging engine easier… Because the casting part is easy.. it’s making the mould that is hard.

While that may be the case with regular parafin wax, it’s worth considering the potential of goldsmiths wax as used in their take on lost wax casting.
It is sufficiently stable to allow for casting in place of heat resistant gemstones allowing for rapid manufacture of pieces using pre-cast waxes.
The stones are snapped into place in the wax blanks, invested with the appropriate plaster mix, burnt out and are then ready for casting. Break open the investment and a fully set ring is inside, ready for clean-up.
High dimensional stability, rapid hardening.